Joey Nemesi
10.4K posts

Joey Nemesi
@JNEM412
WPS from Nashvegas. Tweets are my own.

James Harden when guarded by Ausar Thompson and Ron Holland this series: 0.0% FG 0.0% 3PT 1 Assist 3 Turnovers

Watching your girl dispute a room charge with the front desk




There are far more categories where AI agents making things more efficient will induce demand for that skill than spaces where agents eliminate the work. This is why the AI jobs predictions will not play out as advertised. AI making it easy to produce more code will mean we start to apply code to far more parts of our businesses. We will build automation and software for things that wouldn’t have made sense before. Marketing automation, client onboarding, modernizing old systems, doing far more research on existing data, and more. More engineers. Far more software will mean vastly more security risks. This will mean far more people thinking through system security, compliance, and governance. This used to be primarily manual and only large companies could afford this work. AI will make it so more companies care about this (and maybe can do something about it), causing more security roles. AI will also lower the cost of a bunch of previously relatively niche or harder to access categories of work. Companies will now be doing 10X more with video and graphics, and will need people to manage that work. More media. We’re going to have a near unlimited set of legal challenges in a world of AI as AI helps write even more bespoke and complicated legal docs. More lawyers. Then there’s the impact of AI efficiency on non-office worker jobs. Talked to a customer that said they’re going to make scheduling medical appointments and getting referrals so efficient the next problem will be there will be no booking time slots available. More healthcare. Many industries will have this same dynamic play out. The examples are endless once you start to think through second order effects of agents making work more efficient.



Vibe coders debugging an app they built with Claude Code:



Ryan Gosling just had his 1st hit as a lead this weekend since LA LA LAND. We are not hearing that he might go away. Chris Hemsworth has never been the lead of a hit movie. Ever. I enjoy both of them as actors. But Kevin Hart has more box office clout. We just don’t hear that.
















